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Disclosing affiliate links isn't optional, but it's simpler than the legalese suggests. Here are the FTC basics in plain language: what counts, the standard to meet, where to put disclosures, and the wording that works.
Published on July 18, 2026
by Fawaz

90% of new affiliates worry that admitting they earn a commission will scare people off.
In practice, the opposite tends to be true: audiences trust affiliates who are upfront more than ones who hide it.
And regardless of how it affects conversions, it isn't a choice. If you earn a commission from a link, you have to say so.
The good news is that the rules are simpler than the legalese suggests. This guide covers the basics in plain language.
A quick note: this is general information, not legal advice, and I'm not a lawyer. If you're running large campaigns, promoting regulated products like finance or health, or operating across multiple countries, it's worth having someone qualified review your approach.
The relevant rules come from the FTC's Endorsement Guides, which interpret the law against deceptive advertising.
The core idea is a single concept: the material connection.
A material connection is any relationship between you and a brand that your audience wouldn't expect and would want to know about, because it might affect how much weight they give your recommendation. An affiliate commission is unambiguously a material connection.
So are free products, gifted items, sponsorships, discounts, perks like free trips or tickets, employment, ownership, and even a close personal relationship with the brand.
The FTC doesn't care what you call the money. Commission, referral fee, bounty, revenue share, store credit. If you get something of value when someone acts on your recommendation, disclose it.
A useful test: would your audience care that you received something of value? If yes, say so.
Everything comes down to two words: clear and conspicuous. That's the actual legal standard, and it's less about the exact wording you use than about whether an ordinary person would actually notice and understand it.
In practice, this means:
A disclosure that technically exists somewhere on the page but takes effort to find does not meet the standard, even though it's there.
Placement is where most affiliates go wrong, so here's the practical version.
Put it at the top, before the first paragraph and before any affiliate link. A sitewide footer disclaimer isn't enough, because someone landing on your post from a search engine passes every link before they'd ever reach the footer.
Disclose in the video itself, not just the description. Say it out loud near the beginning, and also include it in the description near your links. Plenty of viewers never scroll down.
First line of the caption, before the "more" cut-off. For Stories, put it on the frame itself, not just in a bio link. If a carousel has separate recommendations across slides, don't assume one caption covers all of them.
On screen and, ideally, spoken. Short videos get watched fast and often muted, so a visible label on the video itself is more reliable than a caption people scroll past.
Repeat it. Viewers join at different points, so a single mention at the start means most of your audience never hears it. Periodic disclosures, or a persistent on-screen one, are the safe approach.
Near the top, before the first affiliate recommendation. Not in the unsubscribe footer, and not behind a link to a separate disclosure page.
Say it out loud, near the recommendation itself. A line in the show notes alone doesn't reach listeners.
The FTC doesn't publish a mandatory script. What matters is clarity.
These all work:
And these don't:
The rule of thumb: if a stranger reading quickly wouldn't immediately understand that you get paid, it isn't clear enough.
Most platforms now offer built-in tools, like paid partnership labels or automatic commission tags.
Use them, but don't rely on them alone.
They're a supplement, not a substitute, because they're easy to miss and they don't always convey what an ordinary viewer needs to understand.
There's a narrow exception worth knowing: where a platform's own affiliate program applies an automatic "creator earns commission" tag and that program is your only connection to the brand, that tag has been treated as sufficient on its own.
But the moment you have any additional relationship on top, a paid collaboration, an ambassador deal, anything extra, the tag alone doesn't cover you.

The ones that catch people most often:
The FTC treats undisclosed material connections as deceptive advertising, and it has become noticeably more focused on how disclosures hold up in real content rather than whether they technically exist somewhere.
Its rules also now specifically target fake and manipulated reviews, which carry civil penalties that adjust annually and run well into five figures per violation.
Beyond regulators, there are practical consequences.
Platforms remove non-compliant content and suspend accounts, programs terminate affiliates who create risk for them, and your audience loses trust in you if they discover a relationship you didn't mention.
Worth knowing if you also run a program: brands share responsibility for their affiliates' disclosures.
If you're a merchant, that means training your affiliates, giving them compliant language to use, and monitoring what goes out.
The FTC's rules apply to content reaching US consumers, but they're not the only rules.
The UK, EU, Canada, Australia, and others have their own advertising standards with similar principles and different specifics.
If your audience is international, the safe approach is the same either way: disclose clearly, every time, where people will actually see it.
Disclosure isn't the obstacle new affiliates think it is.
Say plainly that you earn a commission, put it where people see it before they click, use words an ordinary person understands, and do it on every piece of content.
That's most of the compliance right there.
It's also just good practice.
The affiliates who build durable income are the ones whose audiences believe them, and being upfront about how you get paid is part of earning that.
Ready to find programs worth being honest about? Browse the Affilitrak marketplace and join free.